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{{JAustenCharacter
|Name= Fitzwilliam Darcy
|Image=PrideandPrejudiceCH3detail.jpg
|caption=Darcy and [[Elizabeth Bennet|Bennet]] by [[C. E. Brock]] (1895)<br> ''She is tolerable, but not handsome enough to tempt '''me'''.''
|Fullname= Mr. Fitzwilliam<ref name=fitzwilliam /> Darcy
|Gender= Male
|Age= 28<ref name=chapter59 />
|Income= £10,000+/year<ref name=chapter59 />
|Carriages= [[Curricle]] at [[Pemberley]]
|PrimaryResidence= [[Pemberley|Pemberley House]], in [[Derbyshire]]
|RomanticInterest= [[Elizabeth Bennet]] (later his wife)
|Parents= Mr Darcy and Lady Anne Darcy (formerly Anne Fitzwilliam)
|Siblings= Georgiana Darcy
|Portrayed= [[Pride and Prejudice (1940 film)|1940 Movie]]: [[Laurence Olivier]]<br />1952 TV adaptation: [[Andrew Osborn]]<br />1952 TV serial: [[Peter Cushing]]<br />1958 TV serial: [[Alan Badel]]<br />1967 TV serial: [[Lewis Fiander]]<br />[[Pride and Prejudice (1980 TV serial)|1980 TV serial]]: [[David Rintoul]]<br />[[Pride and Prejudice (1995 TV serial)|1995 TV serial]]: [[Colin Firth]]<br />[[Pride and Prejudice (2005 film)|2005 Movie]]: [[Matthew Macfadyen]]
|}}
'''Mr Fitzwilliam Darcy''' is a fictional character and one of two protagonists in [[Jane Austen]]'s [[novel]] ''[[Pride and Prejudice]]''. He is an archetype of the aloof romantic hero, and a romantic interest of [[Elizabeth Bennet]], the novel's other protagonist. The story's narration includes Elizabeth's perspective on events more often than Darcy's, which makes Elizabeth a more sympathetic figure. Usually only referred to as "Mr Darcy", his first name is mentioned twice in the novel.<ref name=fitzwilliam>''Pride and Prejudice''. Chapters [[wikisource:Pride and Prejudice/Chapter 25|25]] and [[wikisource:Pride and Prejudice/Chapter 35|35]].</ref> The novel gives his age as twenty-eight, and his income as £10,000 a year.<ref name=chapter59>''Pride and Prejudice''. Chapter [[wikisource:Pride and Prejudice/Chapter 59|59]].</ref>


==Character==
== October 2008 ==
In the novel, Mr. Darcy is a wealthy gentleman with an income of at least £10,000 a year, and the owner of [[Pemberley]], a large estate in [[Derbyshire]], [[England]]. Darcy slights Elizabeth at their first meeting, but becomes attracted to Elizabeth, and begins to court her, in his own way, while struggling against his continued feelings of superiority. When Darcy realizes his friend, Mr. Bingley, is seriously courting [[Elizabeth Bennet]]'s elder sister, Jane, Darcy disapproves of the relationship and convinces Bingley that Jane does not care about him. Darcy's interference in Bingley and Jane's budding relationship, has caused Elizabeth to dislike him intensely.


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When she turns down his proposal of marriage however, Darcy is stunned, and shocked into a new reality of how his behaviour is perceived by others, particularly Elizabeth. Now he reconsiders all, and then commits to go out of his way to demonstrate his respect and devotion for her. He tempers his pride, re-evaluates his feelings on the relationship between Bingley and Jane, and, acts to save Elizabeth's youngest sister [[Pride and Prejudice#Characters in Pride and Prejudice|Lydia]] from disgrace at the hands of his bitter enemy, George Wickham: after these two have run away together, Darcy convinces him to marry her. His rescue of Lydia from disgrace was not done to win Elizabeth but to ease her distress, because he attempts to keep her from knowing about it. He does it in spite of being required to deal not only with George Wickham, but with a former companion to his sister who betrayed her trust. The novel suggests that it may have cost him a year's income. (This contrasts sharply with a situation in Jane Austen's ''[[Mansfield Park]]'', where Mr. Crawford proposes to Fanny Price immediately after doing a favour for her that cost him very little.) Darcy's second proposal to Elizabeth, against the express wishes of his aunt, Lady Catherine, completes the novel's [[climax]]; she accepts him, much to the delight of her mother, and the novel concludes with her becoming Mrs. Darcy.


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Darcy is depicted within the novel as a seemingly cold and aloof man with a large sense of personal pride that frequently expresses itself as arrogance. His apparently distant manner and contempt for those around him leads to his becoming the focus of the disdain of both Elizabeth and many of the other characters over the course of the narrative, particularly in light of the claims of George Wickham, who insists that Darcy has wronged him in the past and who, because of his approachable and charming nature, is automatically given the benefit of the doubt over Darcy. It is eventually revealed, however, that these first impressions are erroneous, as Darcy's seemingly arrogant character masks a sincerely generous and upright nature, and that it was in fact ''he'' who was wronged by Wickham, whose own character is revealed to be untrustworthy and duplicitous. Even such matters as his interference in the relationship between Jane and Bingley are presented and re-interpreted as being motivated by genuine concern for the feelings of his friend rather than out of malicious intent.

==Noted portrayals of Mr. Darcy==
{{see|List of artistic depictions of and related to Pride and Prejudice}}
[[Image:ColinFirth-FDarcy.png|left|thumb|200px|[[Colin Firth]] as Mr.Darcy in the [[Pride and Prejudice (1995 TV serial)|1995 BBC adaptation]].]]
* [[Laurence Olivier]] portrayed Darcy in the [[Cinema of the United States#Golden Age of Hollywood|classic]] 1940 version of ''[[Pride and Prejudice (1940 film)|Pride and Prejudice]]''.
* [[Alan Badel]] portrayed Darcy in the 1958 BBC adaptation.
* [[David Rintoul]] portrayed Darcy in the [[Pride and Prejudice (1980 TV serial)|1980 BBC adaptation]].
* [[Colin Firth]] portrayed Darcy in the 1995 BBC version of ''[[Pride and Prejudice (1995 TV serial)|Pride and Prejudice]]''. Firth's portrayal of Darcy inspired [[Helen Fielding]] to create the character [[Mark Darcy]] in her novels ''[[Bridget Jones' Diary]]'' and ''[[Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason]]''. Firth then played Mark Darcy in the films based on Fielding's novels.
*[[Orlando Seale]] portrayed Will Darcy in the 2003 film ''[[Pride & Prejudice: A Latter-Day Comedy]]'' a modern version of ''Pride and Prejudice''.
* [[Martin Henderson]] portrayed Will Darcy in the 2005 film ''[[Bride and Prejudice]]'', a [[Bollywood]] adaptation of ''Pride and Prejudice''.
* [[Matthew Macfadyen]] portrayed Darcy in the 2005 film ''[[Pride and Prejudice (2005 film)|Pride and Prejudice]]''.
* [[Elliot Cowan]] portrayed Darcy in the 2008 ITV drama ''[[Lost in Austen]]'', a tale about a modern girl who is transported back in time into the Pride and Prejudice plot.

==Cultural influence and legacy==
The character of Fitzwilliam Darcy has appeared and inspired numerous works. Both Mr. Darcy and [[Elizabeth Bennet]] feature as part of [[science fiction]] [[author]] [[Philip Jose Farmer]]'s '[[Wold Newton family]]' concept, which links numerous fictional characters (such as [[Tarzan]] and [[Sherlock Holmes]]) together via an interconnected family tree of people and events.{{Fact|date=January 2008}} According to Farmer's works, both were recipients of radiation resulting from a meteorite that struck [[Wold Newton, East Riding of Yorkshire|Wold Newton]] in [[Yorkshire]] in the 1790s (this event actually occurred). This allowed them to be the ancestors of many other famous literary characters, some of whom possessed unusual or even superhuman gifts and abilities. American writer [[Pamela Aidan]] has written a trilogy called ''[[Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman]]'' (former title was ''The Chronicles of Pemberley''), which explores Darcy's perspective on the events of ''[[Pride and Prejudice]]'' - in particular focusing on his developing relationship with and feelings for Elizabeth Bennet.{{Fact|date=January 2008}}

[[Helen Fielding]] has admitted she "pillaged her plot"<ref>[http://us.penguingroup.com/static/rguides/us/bridget_joness_diary.html Penguin Reading Guides - Bridget Jones's Diary] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref> for ''[[Bridget Jones's Diary]]'' from ''Pride and Prejudice''. In ''Bridget Jones's Diary'' and its sequel ''[[Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason]]'', [[Bridget Jones]] is constantly mentioning the [[Pride and Prejudice (1995 TV serial)|1995 BBC adaptation]] and watches the scene in the fourth episode where Darcy ([[Colin Firth]]) comes out of a pond wearing a wet white shirt numerous times,<ref name="edge">"Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason" Helen Fielding. Penguin Books, 1999. (ISBN 014303443X)</ref> and refers to the Darcy and Elizabeth of the TV series as "my chosen representatives in the field of shagging, or, rather, courtship".<ref>[http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1514397/story.jhtml MTV.com - 'Pride & Prejudice': The Way They Were (Nov 23 2005)] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref> When in ''The Edge of Reason'' Bridget becomes a journalist, she is flown to [[Italy]] where she is to interview Firth about his (then upcoming) film ''[[Fever Pitch (1997 film)|Fever Pitch]]'', but finds herself only asking him questions about Mr.Darcy and the filming of the "pond scene".<ref name="edge" /> This scene was shot but not included in the film adaptation of ''[[Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (film)|Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason]]'' because Colin Firth portrayed Mark Darcy, Bridget's love interest. This scene can be seen in the DVD's extra features. Colin Firth's Mr.Darcy in the BBC adaptation has been called the “definitive” Darcy,<ref>[http://emol.org/film/archives/prideandprejudice/review.html Entertainment Magazine - The Timelessness of Jane Austen’s Classic Romance] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref> and his "pond scene" made it into [[Channel 4]]'s Top 100 TV Moments.<ref>[http://www.spring.net/karenr/articles/independent060900.html The Independent - There's no escaping Mr Darcy (9 June 2000)] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref> Colin Firth has found it hard to shake off the Darcy image,<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4180324.stm BBC News - Star takes pride in new Prejudice] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref> and he thought that playing Bridget Jones’s Mark Darcy, a character inspired by the other Darcy, would ridicule and liberate himself once and for all from the character.<ref>[http://www.firth.com/articles/03vanfair_italy_oct.html Vanity Fair (Italy) - Me Sexy? only to that crazy Bridget Jones (Oct 16, 2003)] Retrieved on [[January 4]]-[[2008]].</ref>

==Footnotes==
<references />
{{Commons|Pride and Prejudice}}
{{Jane Austen}}


[[Category:Jane Austen characters|Darcy, Fitzwilliam]]
[[Category:Fictional English people|Darcy, Fitzwilliam]]

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Revision as of 23:05, 10 October 2008

October 2008

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